Friday, March 19, 2010

Sticky Toffee Pudding

Dear Sticky Toffee Pudding,

You had me at sticky. I love you more than my luggage. I miss you.

Love,

Edith

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Yep. I promised cake and here I am delivering. Pudding in the UK means dessert. Sticky toffee pudding is a dessert of the cake variety. More specifically, it's a gooey spice cake with a gooey caramel glaze. It is DEE-LISH-US. Even the Cadbury's version that you buy in a weird tin and boil is delicious. So I suspected that the homemade Jamie Oliver version was going to be delicious too. I was right. It's better than the canned kind. Imagine that.

Put dates in bowl with the baking soda and cover with 1 cup boiling water. Let stand for a couple of minutes so dates will soften. (Science in action!) Drain the dates and mash them with a potato masher or puree them in a blender or food processor. (If you use the coconut-rolled kind, they mash quite easily with the back of a spoon.)

In a separate bowl, cream the butter and brown sugar until pale in color, using a wooden spoon. Add eggs, flour, spices, and Ovaltine. Mix together well and then fold in yogurt and pureed dates. Pour batter into greased dish and bake for 35 minutes.

While the cake is baking, make the caramel sauce, like so:

In small heavy saucepan, stir together 1 cup brown sugar and 2 tablespoons cornstarch. Stir in 1/2 cup water. Add 2/3 cup half-and-half, 1/4 cup light corn syrup, and 2 tablespoons butter. Cook and stir over medium heat until bubbly. The mixture may look curdled, just keep cooking and stirring. Remove from heat once thickened and stir in 1 teaspoon (or more) vanilla. This sauce is great on bread puddings or ice cream or really anything.

*Notes: (1) Mr. Oliver's toffee recipe did not work for me and I have not figured out what I did wrong. Hence the trusty caramel recipe from my trusty red recipe folder. It's a sure thing. (2) I did not have self-rising flour, so I found a recipe online for self-rising flour. I thought it worked fine until the cake cooled. It totally sunk in the middle. This did not make the cake any less tasty, but it was definitely a bad influence on its presentation. So I recommend using self-rising flour or using a super precise substitute recipe (1 cup + 1 tablespoon of flour suggests a need for precision, yes?). (3) No veganization possibilities here. The butter is sort of what makes this bad boy so so good.

4 comments:

My brother-in-law is of the British persuasion (and also a Sheehan, weird) and his lovely British-by-marriage wife made this for dessert on Christmas. I almost died. Vegan-shmegan. Give me some toffee pudding!